Publication | Closed Access
How We Complain: The Effect of Personality on Consumer Complaint Channels
56
Citations
45
References
2014
Year
Customer ExperienceCustomer SatisfactionPersonality ScienceBehavioral Decision MakingConsumer StudySocial PsychologyConsumer ResearchConsumer AttitudeSocial InfluencePersonality TypesCommunicationComplaint BehaviorPsychologySocial SciencesManagementConsumer BehaviorConsumer IssueConsumer Decision MakingService RecoveryConsumer PerceptionPurchase IntentionPassive Complaint BehaviorMarketingConsumer Complaint ChannelsPersonality PsychologyPersuasion
The purpose of this study was to investigate the effect of personality types on consumer complaint channels. Respondents completed a survey that depicted four service failure scenarios, each with 11 possible courses of action. The three personality factors measured against the complaint behavior were locus of control, the California Psychological Inventory measure of sociability and Cattell’s 16 personality factors of relaxed versus tense. Factor analysis revealed three complaint channel dimensions: active, passive, and delayed. Sociability produced more active and less passive complaint behavior. Locus of control interacted with relaxed versus tense on the use of passive and delayed complaints. The findings have implications for recognizing and resolving customer complaints for different personality types.
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